Last week Shannon and the girls went with Grammie and Opa
down to visit Whitney, leaving me at home alone for two whole days. Two days of doing whatever I want at home!
Cereal for every meal! Wild parties! Don’t close the door to the bathroom!
It was really boring.
This was the longest that I’d been at home alone since
Shannon ditched me in St. George to go be sick at her parent’s house more than
4 years ago. We’ve never done the whole
send-the-wife-and-kids-to-Utah-for-6-weeks-in-the-summer thing, and I’ve always
thought families who routinely do that must be a little bit crazy. I now think that even more.
(Not that there's anything wrong with that. If the 6 week trip to Utah is what works for your family, more power to you. And I suppose I shouldn't knock what I haven't tried. And yet, here I am, knocking it.)
Sure, it’s nice to know that I can clean up a room, and have
it be exactly as tidy when I re-enter the room the next day. And it’s peaceful to have all the silence
that you want. But it’s boring to not
have someone to tell about your exciting day.
(“Honey, co-worker and I thought up an improved axle design today!”) And
as much as I dislike the frantic frenzy that is most evening at home (dinner! dishes!
FHE! Baths! Bedtime stories!) it is just as disagreeable to realize that
between 6pm when I come home and 11pm when I go to bed, all I have to do is
feed myself and . . . um . . . put on my
pjs.
2 comments:
You must be an extrovert. I have become more and more introverted the c more c kids I have. A night from 6 pm to 11 pm of silence and the ability to do whatever I want for a night or two sounds like pretty much the best thing I could ever have.
I blame the phone for all the extra c's.
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